Africa to pilot bond aimed at formalising artisanal mining

By Maxwell Akalaare Adombila

DAKAR, April 8 (Reuters) – A sustainability ​bond aimed at integrating artisanal miners into formal supply chains will be ‌piloted by a Canada-based advisory firm and a mid-tier Zambian copper miner this year, the firms said.
 
Artisanal mining provides livelihoods for hundreds of millions globally. In Africa, it often operates informally on or ​near company-run mines, hitting their profits, spreading pollution and depriving nations of revenue.
 
The proposed “stakeholder prosperity bond” ​developed by the advisory firm Veridicor with Zambia’s Metalex Commodities, aims to ⁠address that, said Rob Karpati, its finance director.
 
“Instead of pushing artisanal miners off land, ​this model professionalises them,” he told Reuters.
 
The instrument links investor returns to predefined social and ​environmental outcomes for workers, communities and host economies rather than output.
 
The debut issuance would raise between $100 million and $200 million by year-end to help Metalex Commodities integrate artisanal and small-scale miners through regulated offtake ​agreements as well as shared infrastructure and equipment investment.
 

POTENTIAL INVESTORS

Potential investors include European sustainability ​bond funds, impact and mining investors, banks and wealthy individuals focused on sustainability, the firms said.
Zambia, Africa’s second-largest ‌copper ⁠producer, hosts tens of thousands of artisanal miners, including around Metalex’s northwestern permit.
 
“Large mines tend to be the anchor of these [bonds] because it’s got to go on someone’s balance sheet,” said Karpati.
 
“They end up gaining financially because they get offtake from it, and the ​artisanal miners gain financially ​because it’s a ⁠fair price, not some predatory intermediate.”
Industrial mines would sit at the centre of each bond structure to support repayment, while sustainability-linked terms ​would adjust interest rates based on social and environmental performance, Karpati ​said.
 
Metalex founder ⁠and chief executive Ayo Sopitan said the bond would allow the company to run large programmes integrating artisanal miners into its supply chain.
 
“We plan to source around 30% of our ⁠ore from ​trained, licensed local miners,” he said. “The bond lets us ​do that at a much larger scale than our balance sheet alone would allow.”
 
The bond is also planned ​in Democratic Republic of Congo and Ghana.